i used B&K Dc amp meter for about 10 years, until the readings became erratic and high, i replaced it several years ago, with one from amazon that i am sure is China built, but it works perfectly
i have fluke that is almost 25 yrs old, but i have other MM that i use most of the time, butthat Fluke with its rubber impact carrying case has been dropped from a 6ft step ladders on to concrete floors, and keeps on working

Are you saying Harbor Freight does not sell quality tools like they claim?

I'm not concerned with amps, just checking voltage and maybe resistance. So when Harbor Freight is giving away the cheap multi-meters I grab one. They may not be the most accurate, although they appear to be, but good enough for 12v, 120v troubleshooting. Not saying they sell quality stuff, but hey a free meter that works, sounds good to me.

Start out with a free HF MultiMeter (DVOM). For the price of a pair of half decent pocket flashlights you get a DVOM tha handles 90% of what you need a meter for when RVing. The "Ideal List" goes more like this:

If you camp On The Grid, you can get most of this with a HF AC Clamp Ammeter on sale about $15 (has Volts/Ohms too but not enough scales to always be helpful) plus a Free DVOM when you buy the Meter. HF's rules are tightening but you might get 20% discount even on a posted "sale."

I had an Amprobe that was my "pet" till I found out it was a mile out of calibration and my HF matched professional electrican's meter. Was fortunate to be gifted a salvaged Fluke that does Capacitance. I use it very carefully not wanting to blow it out on a Senior Moment.

I grieve the loss of any tool, though, so when you get one with a dial, MARK the Pointer in a contrasting color so you don't make a mistake like having it on Ohms when you want to check AC Volts 180* away on the dial. Meters run on Smoke that's sealed inside, and that kind of trick will let it out.

Use to work at a shop that only purchased Flukes. Terrible. Failed within weeks of purchase with exotic intermittent issues that were always hard to explain. I was repeatedly replacing LCD screens or cleaning display contacts. Of course we were in a hazard filled industrial setting with many ham fisted mechanics using them.

My point is that buying a Fluke is no guarantee of a meter living a long life. Now days I'm just looking for features, not name branding.

My current meter is from Circuit Specialists...an Owon B35 with 20 Amp current reading (most DVM's only have 10 Amp), auto ranging, auto AC/DC sensing, many more handy functions like Hz, hFe, Temp, and the big thing for me while working alone in a large RV...Blue tooth! Installed the app on my phone, linked the meter and phone and now I can hook the meter up for a reading in some remote location, head inside to flick switches or start the engine, and read the remote voltages right on my phone. Very cool.